Horvath, Frank2019-11-252019-11-252019European Polygraph 2019, nr 2, s. 61-84.1898-5238http://hdl.handle.net/11315/27062"The city of Chicago apparently got its name from the Miami-Illinois Indian word “shikaakwa,” meaning ‘smelly leek (garlic/onion)’. The leeks were prevalent along the river that flowed through the area (now the city of Chicago) and the Indian name for them also referred to the ‘striped skunk’, a smelly critter. Th at bit of history has no real relevance here other than to note that what happened in Chicago produced an exotic aroma that still today hangs in the air and continues to infl uence what is known about and what is done in the field of Polygraphy. Smelly? Well, maybe to critics. Not to those who know and understand Polygraphy."(...)enUznanie autorstwa-Użycie niekomercyjne-Bez utworów zależnych 3.0 PolskaHistory of the polygraphLeonard KeelerJohn ReidFred InbauControl Question TechniquePrawoChicago: Birthplace of Modern PolygraphyArtykuł2380-055010.2478/ep-2019-000510.2478/ep-2019-0005